loader image
Friday, January 9, 2026
75.6 F
McAllen
- Advertisement -

AMA asks Congress to hold insurers accountable for repeated failures

Translate to Spanish or other 102 languages!

With Congress holding hearings this week on the growing mental health crisis, the American Medical Association (AMA) is urging congressional leaders to take steps to address nearly 15 years of repeated failures by health insurance companies to comply with the landmark mental health and substance use disorder parity law.  Image for illustration purposes
With Congress holding hearings this week on the growing mental health crisis, the American Medical Association (AMA) is urging congressional leaders to take steps to address nearly 15 years of repeated failures by health insurance companies to comply with the landmark mental health and substance use disorder parity law.  Image for illustration purposes

Mega Doctor News

- Advertisement -

CHICAGO—With Congress holding hearings this week on the growing mental health crisis, the American Medical Association (AMA) is urging congressional leaders to take steps to address nearly 15 years of repeated failures by health insurance companies to comply with the landmark mental health and substance use disorder parity law.  

The Senate HELP Committee and the House Ways and Means Committee are examining how to help patients with a mental illness given health plans’ repeated noncompliance. A recent report to Congress from the departments of Labor, Health and Human Services, and Treasury found that insurers’ parity violations have continued and become more serious since the law was enacted more than a decade ago. The report found widespread violations affecting patients with autism, eating disorders and substance use disorders — violations that led to delays and denials of care, patient harm, and likely avoidable deaths.  

“This report underscores two simple facts: insurers will not change their behaviors without increased enforcement and accountability, and patients will continue to suffer until that happens,” according to the letter from AMA CEO James L. Madara, M.D.   

- Advertisement -

The AMA agrees with many of the policy recommendations in the congressional report pertaining to the mental health parity law, including: 

  1. granting the Labor Department the authority to assess civil monetary penalties for parity violations and pursue noncompliance facilitated by third-party administrators 
  2. enabling plan participants and beneficiaries to recover financial losses associated with improper claims denials stemming from violations of the law 
  3. requiring plans to conduct prospective health benefit analyses for parity compliance, and  
  4. permanently expanding access to telehealth.

Download a copy of the AMA’s full letter here.  

- Advertisement -
- Advertisement -

- Advertisement -

More Articles

Study Shows a Sharp Drop in Teen Wellness Visits During Transition to Adulthood

It’s common that as kids get to high school and transition to adulthood, they begin to skip yearly wellness visits with a pediatrician or other primary care provider.

Texas A&M College of Nursing Answers the Rio Grande Valley’s Call

t’s important to Leann Horsley, PhD, dean of the Texas A&M University College of Nursing, that the students and region know: The program is the same one Aggies studying in Bryan-College Station have come to trust and leverage when it’s time to enter the health care workforce.

Miller Earns OTA of the Year Award as He Concludes 40-Year Career

South Texas College faculty member Layman Darnell Miller was recently honored as the Occupational Therapy Assistant (OTA) of the Year by the Texas Occupational Therapy Association (TOTA), a prestigious statewide recognition celebrating his decades of service as a clinician, educator, veteran and advocate for the profession.

Crossing Borders at Dawn, STC Dual Credit Students Train to Save Lives

Each morning at 6 a.m., South Texas College Dual Credit students Carol Peña, 16, Darianna Martinez, 18 and Moises Cardenas, 17, leave their homes in Miguel Aleman, Mexico, and cross the border before sunrise
- Advertisement -
×